INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Israeli dual/multi-use WMD |
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by Wayne Madsen The Wayne Madsen Report Entered into the database on Saturday, July 22nd, 2006 @ 18:54:50 MST |
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Israeli dual/multi-use WMD (left) and badly burnt body
of young Lebanese girl with telltale signs of white phosphorous attack. U.S. military intelligence sources have told WMR that the artillery shell shown
below being used by an Israel Defense Force member in Lebanon, is a type of
dual and multi-use weapon the neocons falsely accused Saddam Hussein of possessing.
Although the canister artillery shell is marketed as an anti-land mine fuel-air
bomb, its payload can also include the chemicals used in thermobaric bombs,
white phosphorous weapons, and chemical weapons. Thermobaric bombs contain polymer-bonded
explosives or solid fuel-air explosives in their payloads. Thermobarics use
a fuse munition unit (FMU) such as that seen on the nose of the Israeli artillery
shell. The shell penetrates buildings, underground shelters, or tunnels, creating
such a blast pressure that all the oxygen is sucked out from the spaces and
the lungs of anyone who happens to be in proximity. Israel's use of such "vacuum"
weapons has been reported from across Lebanon. The artillery shell below, with its FMU penetrator, can also be used to deliver
chemical weapons, the use of which is also being reported from southern Lebanon.
In addition, it can deliver white phosphorous, a substance that literally melts
through skin but leaves clothing relatively intact. In Fallujah and elsewhere
in Iraq, U.S. forces have used white phosphorous on civilians, leaving grotesque
corpses as a psychological warfare reminder to the civilian population to surrender
or evacuate an area. The photo from Sidon of a burnt and badly disfigured young
Lebanese girl is a telltale sign of white phosphorous use by the Israelis. Similar
photos from Fallujah were shown to this editor by a top investigative reporter
for Italy's RAI television network. U.S. military intelligence experts believe the ease at which the Israeli soldier
is handling the artillery shell is an indication that the payload contains light-weight
gas and not a fuel-air mixture or thermobaric bomb components. WMR continues
to receive reports from Lebanon of depleted uranium shells being used by the
Israelis. The New York Times today is reporting that the U.S. is stepping up
its delivery of "precision-guided" munitions to Israel (see article
below on Bush administration pre-planning for the Israeli invasions of Lebanon
and Gaza). __________________________ CAN YOU HELP US , PLEASE! Do you know what kind of weapons causes this damage?
Do you know what kind of weapons causes this damage?
Beirut I left the office early last night ; at midnight. There was only one devastating picture yesterday : that of two people who were
killed in air strikes on Akkar,(the poorer area) in the north, late Wednesday
night. Both corps were black, both were dismembered , both were "weird".
I don't think it matters anymore to try to prove that Israel is using unconventional
, forbidden weapons .. that would only prove that it should have used "allowed"
weapons. Who cares, people are dying anyway. And whatever weapons are being
used , the pollution they're creating will kill the survivors from cancer later. The rest of the pictures were less devastating, conventional : demolished houses,
wiped out villages and towns, more refugees , some of them starving, lovely
babes on board of US marines ships and colored people from poor countries lining
up in front of embassies hoping they will get them out of this hell. The really devastating pictures will came later , much later, some day when
all this will stop maybe we'll be able to visit the ruins of whole villages.
But even then it might be too late : how long does it take corps buried under
rubbles to disintegrate and vanish ? Anyway , so I left the office early and went home with my friend who's staying
with us because his house is in the southern suburb of Beirut. I was a bit worried
because my brother in law , Khalil's brother, was there too and I was wondering
if I'd be able to manage space for everybody to sleep comfortably. Raed, my brother in law, and his eight-month pregnant wife , had left Jebshit
in the south yesterday morning. They reached Beirut by 5:00 pm. They had crossed a bridge in Habbouche who'd been targeted only once . It was
destroyed but cars were still able to find a way through. Half an hour after
Raed had crossed the bridge, it was bombed again and completely demolished this
time (sounds like an Indian movie, right?). Of course Raed knew nothing about
that , he trying to make out to Saida, then up to Baakline in the Shouf then
way down back to Beirut. When I got home , I asked if they had dinner. I was a bit ashamed because my
fridge is empty. I hadn't had time lately to buy grocery and I'm "heavily"
relying on milk to feed Kinda, my daughter. "Dinner ?" Raed asked
, "we had 9 shawarma sandwiches, Rana (his wife) and I. Today was the first
time we eat in 3 days". He tells stories about Jebshit. Sad ones. No electricity , no water, no roads,
no food, no newspapers. Some villages even run out of batteries, so they can't
even listen to the news on the radio. Funny, isn't it, that in Beirut we know
more about what's going on than the people concerned. Raed only knew they blew
the Habbouche bridge when he listened to the news after he reached Beirut. I have to admit to all of you that I have very mixed, weird, sick feelings
about all this. The first three or four days were very strange. I was in Beirut , sitting in
an air conditioned office, watching the devastation of the South and the southern
suburb. It felt like when you watch news and pictures from Palestine and Iraq.
You feel frustrated and concerned, but you know there's not much you can do
for them, for mere geographical reasons, at least that's the excuse one uses
to comfort one's self. But "this" was happening a few kilometers away
and I'd still be sitting here watching. Sometimes I just flip and cry. Cry because I'm so helpless and angry. And most
of the time I turn on my "automatic engine on". I wake up at six ,
come to the office, report hideous stories , feel nothing about them , do my
job : double check , choose "fantastic" headlines , pick up the "best"
pictures, try to be as professional as one can be. I do that for 12 to 14 hours.
I'd then go home, pick up my daughter from my mother's house , and go to bed
at one. The Israelis love to start their raids at ten past one, sometimes at
five past one. That's when I'm in bed. Every night, when they start, I rush
out to the balcony to see where the smoke comes from. I live on the twelfth
floor. Every night , when I go out , I see the moon , my lovely moon , shyly
hiding behind the clouds caused by the fires that are surrounding my Beirut. This morning , I stayed home till 12:00. I played with Kinda. My poor little
baby. She doesn't understand what's going on. She keeps asking about her cousins.
She looks at their pictures and keeps repeating their names; as if it was an
exercise not to forget them. I tell her they're in the mountains, and that we
can't go there. When they call us, she refuses to talk to them. She thinks they
abounded her. The first time she heard the bombing, she rushed to my arms asking me if this
was fireworks . I said " no , this is boum boum , ha ha ha " and started
laughing. So now, every time she hears the bombing she starts singing "boum
boum " and she laughs. I left her at noon. She was sleepy, and wouldn't go to bed. It took a few minutes
to realize the reason : she wanted to fall asleep in my arms. Before July the
12th, I would not move at her bed time. I'd put her on my lap , sing to her
until she sleeps. For 10 days now, she's been sleeping in the stroller at my
mother's house: only to guaranty that I will come pick her up when I finish
working. Two last notes: I feel ashamed talking about my daughter while other people's
kids were either killed or lack of food and shelter. But I feel so guilty towards
her. Second : to all the Israelis who have been sending their comments on what I
write , I say this : I agree with you , we are savages , blood lovers, we don't
have feelings, and we actually enjoy looking at the pictures of victims. Actually
, each time we see one , we party and dance. And in my writings, I'm only pretending
to have feelings , and being pathetically sentimental only to bluff. Here, I'm
admitting it. And to all my friends in the west : don't believe anything I say
, cause I'm only viciously using you and trying to turn you into sympathizers
of fundamental terrorism. Hanady ______________________ Beirut The attached pictures are hideously gruesome, but you have to look at them
. Help me find out what kind of weapons cause this kind of dismemberment and
mutation. What kind of weapons cause this kind of damage? Do you know? Could you find
out? None of this is confirmed, or could be here and now. However, there are growing
doubts that Israel might be using internationally forbidden weapons in its current
aggression against Lebanon. News from "Southern Medical Center", a
hospital in Saida( in South Lebanon) are not good. Dr. Bashir Sham, member of
"French Association of Cardiovascular Surgeons", explains that the
way the corps look when they reach the hospital, especially those of the air
strikes in Doueir and Rmayleih, is very abnormal." One might think they
were burnt , but their colour is dark , they're inflated, and they have a terrible
smell" All this , and the hair is not burnt nor do the bodies bleed. Eight of the victims of an air strike on Rmayleih bridge, near Saida, on the
15th of July, were transferred to Sham's hospital. Sham says that only chemical poisonous substances "lead to instant death
without bleeding". Sham thinks that whatever "abnormal " substance causing these features
might penetrate through the skin, or another explanation would be that the missiles
contained toxic gas that stopped the proper functioning of the nervous system,
and led to blood clotting. These toxic materials cause immediate death, within two to thirty minutes,
according to Sham, who admits that these doubts can't be proven, not even by
an autopsy. The director of the same medical center, Ali Mansour, says that due to the
strong smell of the corps, he couldn't breath properly for at least 12 hours
after the corps were handled. He explains that the center received eight bodies from Rmeileh last Monday,
and none of them was bleeding. Mansour tells us the hospital wrote to both the commissioner of the European
Union for Foreign Affaires Javier Solana, and the United Nations Secretary general
Kofi Anan. He said that dr Sham will communicate his doubts to the Doctors Order
in Lebanon. CAN YOU HELP US , PLEASE! Hanady
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Beirut
________________________________ Sidon
___________________________ Tyr
___________________________ Rmayleh
______________________________ Marwahin
__________________________ Zebdine ________________________ Teir Harfa
____________________ Bekaa
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